
The missions came first, but the town proper came in 1731, when fifty-six colonists from the Canary Islands — sent across the Atlantic by the Spanish crown — laid out San Fernando de Béxar around a central plaza and began the church that became San Fernando Cathedral. It was the first organized civil town in Texas, and their plaza is still the heart of downtown. For the next century San Antonio was the most important town between the Rio Grande and the Louisiana line — the capital of Spanish, and then Mexican, Texas.
Today San Antonio is the second-largest city in Texas and one of the most-visited in the country, but its heart is still the oldest civic story in the state: a 1718 mission on a river, five Spanish missions strung along the water, a town founded by Canary Island colonists, and three centuries of Tejano, Spanish, German, and Texas-cattle heritage layered one over another. Our San Antonio designs gather that identity into wearable form — the river, the missions, the longhorn-and-star, the 1718 founding. From the mission bells to the River Walk — wear a little of San Antonio's three centuries of Texas soul.
Why People Visit San Antonio Texas
- Walk the River Walk (Paseo del Río), the cypress-shaded riverside promenade below street level.
- Visit the Alamo (Mission San Antonio de Valero), the first of the city's five Spanish colonial missions.
- Tour Mission San José, the "Queen of the Missions," with its carved Rose Window and stone granary.
- Follow the Mission Trail to Concepción, San Juan, and Espada along the river.
- Step inside San Fernando Cathedral on Main Plaza, begun by the 1731 Canary Island colonists.
- Explore the Pearl, the restored historic brewery district north of downtown.
- Wander Brackenridge Park and the Japanese Tea Garden, with stone footbridges and koi ponds.
- Browse Market Square (El Mercado), the largest Mexican market in the United States.